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Honoring Five for Their Achievements
The Alumni Association recognized recipients of its 2021 Alumni Awards during Homecoming

Hiroyuki Fujita
Distinguished Alumni Award
Hiroyuki Fujita, PhD (GRS 鈥98, physics)
For Hiroyuki Fujita, everything in life begins with one simple question: 鈥淲hy are we doing it this way?鈥 Answering that has simultaneously made him founder and CEO of Quality Electrodynamics, a company in one of Cleveland鈥檚 eastern suburbs that produces critical subsystems of MRI scanners for the global diagnostic imaging industry; chief technology officer of the CT-MR division of Canon Medical Systems Corp.; the inaugural honorary consul of Japan in Cleveland; and a CWRU adjunct faculty member in physics and in medicine.
鈥淲e must challenge the status quo,鈥 Fujita said. 鈥淲e can always find a way to make a better product and a better society.鈥
Fujita came to CWRU to apply his knowledge of physics to medicine. A graduate research challenge from Picker International to improve diagnostic imaging opened the door for Fujita to deploy his physics know-how to create a new design for radiofrequency coils used in MRI machines.
Despite his 17 patents and many other accomplishments and honors—including an invitation to sit in the first lady鈥檚 box for President Barack Obama鈥檚 2012 State of the Union address to Congress—Fujita is most proud of creating what he calls a 鈥渃ulture of difference.鈥
鈥淥ne person cannot do everything,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ut together, we can advance society and benefit the community.鈥

Elizabeth Madigan
Professional Achievement Award
Elizabeth Madigan, PhD (GRS 鈥96, nursing)
Elizabeth Madigan thrives on making connections for others. As CEO of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing, she works to ensure that 135,000 members in more than 100 countries are linked to educational, professional and advocacy resources.
鈥淏eing able to support nurses during the pandemic has been deeply humbling,鈥 Madigan said. As COVID-19 began to spread around the globe, Sigma launched online educational programs that included virus-related content to support nurses through the crisis. Nurses worldwide viewed them thousands of times, prompting Sigma to create more resources.
Before Sigma, Madigan spent more than 20 years as a professor at the university鈥檚 Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, focusing on home health care outcomes in the United States and around the world. The National Institutes of Health and private foundations funded Madigan鈥檚 work, and she produced more than 200 peer-reviewed articles and presentations. Many of her former students have become nurse leaders around the world.
鈥淏eing in a leadership position at the School of Nursing in global health gave me a solid foundation for the Sigma position,鈥 Madigan said. 鈥淲e continue to grow globally and are adding chapters in new countries on a routine basis.鈥

Jane Daroff
Newton D. Baker Distinguished Service Award
Jane Daroff (SAS 鈥85)
Jane Daroff鈥檚 enduring work of building community began when she was a clinical social worker at Case Western Reserve鈥檚 University Health and Counseling Services and continued on a national scale with her LGBTQ+ advocacy.
In 1985, inspired by her son Rob, who is gay, Daroff co-founded the Cleveland chapter of PFLAG, an organization for LGBTQ+ people and their families and allies. Soon after, the Daroff family began hosting a pizza party each fall for LGBTQ+ students and administrators from the university to help participants feel welcome, safe and seen. Daroff still facilitates PFLAG meetings and hosts the dinners. And for more than 30 years, she鈥檚 served in various roles with the Human Rights Campaign, a national LGBTQ+ advocacy organization.
Daroff graduated in her 40s from what鈥檚 now the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences. 鈥淚 never thought that going back to school would result in making a difference in people鈥檚 lives,鈥 said Daroff, who is an emerita board member of both the Mandel School Alumni Association and the university鈥檚 Alumni Association. 鈥淐ase [Western Reserve] opened the door for me to help people connect. Having just one friend in a place can make that place feel so different.鈥

Mickey McKee-Hammad
Daniel T. Clancy Alumni Service Award
Mary Ellen 鈥淢ickey鈥 McKee-Hammad (NUR 鈥73)
Mary Ellen 鈥淢ickey鈥 McKee-Hammad still recalls the excitement she felt transferring to Case Western Reserve for her degree as an undergraduate supporting herself. 鈥淎ttending Case [Western Reserve] was something I thought I could only dream of,鈥 said McKee-Hammad. A scholarship from the university and a grant from University Hospitals turned that dream into reality.
A career in pediatric nursing followed鈥攁s well as a desire to support the university. McKee-Hammad has served on The Alumni Association鈥檚 board and has been a leader of the Atlanta chapter for more than 20 years. But her favorite work as an alumna has been visiting Atlanta—area high schools with the admissions team to interview prospective students.
Their enthusiasm for the future is contagious, she said.
McKee-Hammad also is committed to recognizing and paying forward the support she received as a student. She supports Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing funds and provided one of the lead gifts to establish the Alumni Association Term Scholarship. 鈥淐ase [Western Reserve] provided me with my ability to think, assess and react to changing situations,鈥 she said, 鈥渘ot just as a nurse, but as a parent, volunteer and educator.

Young Alumni Award
Nikhyl Jhangiani (CWR 鈥14; MGT 鈥16; GRS 鈥16, public health)
Nikhyl Jhangiani describes his work as coming full circle. As a graduate student at the university鈥檚 Weatherhead School of Management in 2015, he interned with the digital health team at Cleveland Clinic, exploring how the health system could use technology to serve more patients. Four years later, Jhangiani helped launch a joint venture that did just that: The Clinic by Cleveland Clinic.
Jhangiani is now head of strategy and international business development at The Clinic, a partnership between Cleveland Clinic and Amwell, a company that provides digital health products to connect providers and patients. The Clinic offers online second-opinion visits worldwide through users鈥 health plans and employee benefits.
When the pandemic accelerated health care demands, The Clinic arranged for people living outside the United States and concerned about access to proper care in their home country to receive a second opinion from a Cleveland Clinic specialist.
鈥淭his is what is inherent in what it means to be a Case [Western Reserve] grad,鈥 Jhangiani said. 鈥淲ork hard, give it your all, identify problems and create solutions.鈥